Melanin is
important because its the most primitive and universal
pigment in living organisms. Melanin is produced in the
pineal gland. Abundantly found in primitive organisms such as
fungi, as well as advanced primates. Furthermore, within each
living organism, melanin appears to be located in the major
functional sites. For example, in vertebrates, melanin is not
only present in the skin, eyes, ears, central nervous system,
it can also be found in the pineal gland, pituitary gland,
thyroid gland, thymus gland, adrenal gland, and the barathary
gland. Melanin is abundantly present in the viscera,
including the heart, liver, arteries, the muscles, and the
gastrointestinal tract; thus, within each and every living
organ which aids the human body melanin appears. Regardless
of what color your skin appears to be all genes in all
creatures on this planet are black because they are coated
with melanin.

The amount of
melanin in the skin is one of the most variable of human
traits, and many polygenes are involved. Groups of people or
the population of the world were once classified according to
the skin shade: Black (Nubians), White (Caucasians), Yellow
(Orientals) and Red (Native Americans) etc... We must realize
that just because this is the way they have classified people
does not mean this is the way it should be. The hues of color
of your skin depend on several factors. First is the amount
of melanin in the outer layers of the skin. Melanin acts as a
filter to prevent damage to the delicate deeper layers of the
skin, by penetration of ultraviolet light.

There is more
than one type of melanin. You have brain melanin, also known
as neuromelanin, and you have skin melanin. Neuromelanin does
not run parallel with skin melanin. Whether white, red,
yellow, black, or brown, neuromelanin plays an important role
in functioning of the brain, and nervous system. Melanosomes
(small structures within the melanocyte cells where melanin
is synthesized) find their way into the hair cells, giving
them color. (Two types of melanin, one dark brown and one
red, are responsible for all hair shades).

Pigments that
contribute to skin color are called carotene, a yellowish
hemoglobin, in blood vessels (pink-red), and melanin (black,
brown, red). Darker skins are dominated by melanin, which is
produced from the amino acid tyrosine, by pigment cells
(melanocytes) in the skin. Melanocytes are characterized by
long, fixed extensions of the outer cell membrane. In humans,
other mammals, and birds, melanin is dispersed permantely
throughout each melanocyte, including the extensions, and is
also, transported to nearby skin cells. In other words, if
you increase the amount of melanin in the skin you become
darker and vice versa.

So, what is so
important about melanin? Melanin controls all mental and
physical body activities. Melanin is an extremely stable
molecule, and highly resistant to the digestion by most acids
and bases, and is one of the hardest molecule to ever be
analyzed. If you do not purify your melanin molecule, you
will not heal your body of diseases.

In parts of
Africa, India, and Australia the deposits of melanin in the
skin is heaviest because the people have been exposed to the
most intense sunlight for generations. Northern Europeans
have the least amount of deposits in their skin are lighter,
not to mention their weather is cloudy and cool. The
thickness of the outer layer of the skin is also a factor.
People with darker skin complexions have thicker layers of
skin. And this is a factor alone enhances the skins filtering
effect. The thinner the skin the least melanin. When the skin
is very thin, the blood vessels show through and give a
pinkish color. When an individual adapts to the shifting of
the intensity of the sunlight, the skin becomes darker
because they are exposed to more sunlight. Thats how
you get suntans because its the result of both
thickening and increasing the melanin in the skin. Keratin is
the substance the nails of the fingers and toes are made of.
It also appears in the outer layer of the skin. When keratin
deposits are heavy, the skin has a yellowish, brown shade, as
in the Mongolian populations. They have adapted along a
different pathway to avoid the damaging effects of
ultraviolet light. The reddish hue of the Native Americans
results from a combination of keratin and melanin deposits.

Now, you might
be asking yourself what does melanin have to do with
ultra-violet light? Well, the DNA molecules are all covered
with melanin. One of the things that melanin does is it
actually absorbs ultraviolet radiation. Melanin is constantly
reaching out towards the ultraviolet rays of the sun.
Ultraviolet radiation has been found to be dangerous to
protein. When protein is passed through ultraviolet radiation
it actually causes the molecule to blend. Just like you have
some of our sisters and brothers who go to hairdressers,
killing their ethers just to get their hair done. No offence
to those who do this type of activity so dont go off
the deep end with me. Im not here to tell you what you
should do or not do, because you have your own mind but if
you choose to go to hair dressers and get up under these
strange lights and you have to wear special kind of glasses
with it because of the ultraviolet radiation.

When your
ethers are exposed to the chemical or protein structure in
those perms and tents it causes it to lock into a certain
position, then your hair will not change. Thats the
same thing that happens to your chromosomes or genes. When
ultraviolet rays are exposed to the chromosomes or the genes,
in order for your genes to be able to do what they are
suppose to do naturally, they have to be able to change. But
when they are exposed to ultraviolet radiation they
cant. Thus when the time or need comes for it to change
they will not be able to change. This will result in
deformities in your body.

Melanin can
also be toxic. Eating the improper foods or overeating can
block your connection with the suns energy. When the
suns energy cannot reach the melanin, diseases
manifest. Melanin is deranged only when it becomes toxic. Any
individual who might have toxic melanin will act in a very
similar manner, that which is primitive, animalistic, and
barbaric. It is a civilizing chemical when it is not toxic.
It has physical properties, and personality traits, which
distinguishes it from others. Thats why our bodies are
dedicated to making melanin.

Vitamin B
keeps melanin clean, not to mention good eating habits. If
you want to continue to consume pork, smoke weed, and drink
alcohol thats your own business but your body is
dedicated to making melanin, thus if you make it toxic,
youre only hurting yourself. Melanin is like a
superconductor, or like a battery in a car. It always stay
charged when it is exposed to things such as light, sound,
color, and sun light. It will absorb it to the point where
the melanin will actually absorb the additional energy and
recharge it- self to a brand new level.

Your body has
committed itself to creating melanin so you can survive. The
melanin in your body is always partial charged. When you look
around things like sound, light, sunlight, or colors, the
melanin will absorb the additional energy, and recharge
itself, taking your body to another level. If youre
around sounds that arent good for you your body reacts
to it. Your melanin can convert light energy to sound energy,
thats why an entertainer like Michael Jackson, who was
a big hit back in the days. What he was doing was using his
melanin to convert light energy to sound energy. Now that he
is lacking melanin he hasnt been able to really get a
big hit like in the past. People with melanin are walking
radios and the very dark skinned people are very sensitive to
the different types of radio frequency or thought patterns
that are in the environment. So everything you do, everything
you listen to, everything you eat affects you. It affects
your melanin.